Follow us @nccmt Suivez-nous @ccnmo Funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada | Affiliated with McMaster University Production of this presentation has been made possible through a financial contribution from the Public Health Agency of Canada. The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the Public Health Agency of Canada.. Action Framework for Equity-Integrated Population Health Status Reporting Presenters: Lesley Dyck Susan Snelling June 7, 2016 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET
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NCCMT Spotlight Webinar: Action Framework for Equity-Integrated Population Health Status Reporting
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Funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada | Affiliated with McMaster University Production of this presentation has been made possible through a financial contribution from the Public Health Agency of Canada. The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the Public Health Agency of Canada..
Action Framework for Equity-Integrated Population Health Status Reporting
Presenters:
Lesley Dyck Susan Snelling
June 7, 2016 1:00 – 2:30 PM ET
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Use Q&A to post comments / questions during the webinar
• ‘Send’ questions to All (not privately to ‘Host’)
Connection issues • Recommend using a wired
Internet connection (vs. wireless),
• WebEx 24/7 help line • 1-866-229-3239
Housekeeping
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Q&A
Participant Side Panel in WebEx
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After Today
The PowerPoint presentation (in English and French) and English audio recording will be made available. These resources are available at: PowerPoint: http://www.slideshare.net/NCCMT/ Audio Recording: https://www.youtube.com/user/nccmt/videos
1. Public Health Practitioner 2. Health Practitioner (Other) 3. Education 4. Research 5. Provincial/Territorial/Government/Ministry 6. Municipality 7. Policy Analyst (NGO, etc.) 8. Other
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Lesley Dyck Knowledge Translation Specialist National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health (NCCDH) E: [email protected]
The National Collaborating Centres for Public Health are funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada. The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the Public Health Agency of Canada.
Equity Reporting: Putting knowledge mobilization for health equity at the core of population health status reporting
Spotlight Webinar Tuesday June 7, 2016
Webinar Objectives
• To introduce the Action Framework for Equity-Integrated Population Health Status Reporting.
• To engage participants in reflection on their own current and potential roles in equity-integrated population health status reporting.
National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health Our focus: Social conditions that influence health & narrowing the gap between the least and most healthy
Our audience: Canadian public health organizations & practitioners Our work: Explain and share what’s known to help public health positively influence health for EVERYone through their work
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NCC for Methods and Tools (NCCMT) www.nccmt.ca
• Resources to help you find and use innovative, high quality, up-to-date resources for moving research evidence into practice
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Registry of Methods and Tools
Online Learning Opportunities
Workshops Multimedia
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Networking and Outreach
NCCMT Products and Services
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Health equity means all people (individuals, groups and communities) have a fair chance to reach their full health potential and are not disadvantaged by social, economic and environmental conditions.
NCCDH Glossary of Essential Health Equity Terms http://nccdh.ca/resources/glossary/ Picture from: http://kerncta.blogspot.ca/2013/04/obesity-prevention-summit-2013.html
Purposeful reporting has been identified as a promising practice in public health to help address the social determinants of health and advance health equity.
Sudbury & District Health Unit. 10 promising practices to guide local public health practice to reduce social inequities (2009) http://nccdh.ca/resources/entry/10-promising-practices-guide
“Traditional indicators that measure morbidity and mortality tend to either place responsibility for improving health on the medical or public health communities or on vaguely identified institutions such as the economy, education, or built environment. The result is an overemphasis on medical and public health solutions while failing to articulate the specific institutions and policies that might need to change to promote greater health equity.”
Corburn & Cohen (2012, pg. 5) Corburn J, Cohen AK. (2012). Why we need urban health equity indicators: Integrating science, policy, and community. PLoS Med, 9(8): e1001285. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001285
• Learning Circle Project (2013-2015) • Key stakeholder interviews at local, provincial
and national levels (10) • Conference workshops (3) and a webinar (1)
collecting feedback from over 100 public health stakeholders
Putting knowledge mobilization at the core
A strong KM core, guided by a health equity lens, changes the way we do population health status reporting
NCCPH 2016. Equity integrated population health status reporting: Action Framework. http://nccdh.ca/resources/entry/equity-integrated-population-health-status-reporting-action-framework
includes seven steps for developing and implementing PHSR.
• Each step includes key questions to guide activities and ensure the right structures are implemented to support the work of the Equity-Integrated PHSR process.
Poll Question #4 In your organization, which of the steps do you currently have a role in? (choose all that are relevant)
a) Prepare b) Search c) Assess d) Synthesize and adapt
e) Report
f) Implement g) Evaluate h) None of the above
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“Drafting, measuring, tracking, and reporting of indicators can be viewed not as a technical process for experts alone, but rather as an opportunity to develop new participatory science policy making, or what we call governance.”
Corburn & Cohen (2012, pg. 2) Corburn J, Cohen AK. (2012). Why we need urban health equity indicators: Integrating science, policy, and community. PLoS Med, 9(8): e1001285. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001285
Outcome: an inter-sectoral and inter-disciplinary process is in place
3. How • There is no ‘one size fits all’
approach to mobilizing knowledge in a PHSR process.
• However, there are principles that are essential to apply throughout the process, which have been captured in the framework as a series of questions that must be considered.
Poll Question #5 In your context, in which aspects of the knowledge mobilization core do you believe you have a role to contribute? (choose all that are relevant)
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a) Public Health actor b) Researcher c) Community partner d) Communication e) Collaboration f) Application of a health-equity-lens g) None of the above
Equity-Integrated PHSR Action Framework
Toronto Public Health: The Unequal City
• Strong reporting process and steps
• KM Core still being developed
• After the release they did a workshop with 30 engaged TPH staff to find out how they use the data
TPH (2015). The Unequal City 2015 http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2015/hl/bgrd/backgroundfile-79096.pdf
Key Learnings … so far! • The social factors that affect health are not
universal; need to consider the meaning and relevance of data in the local context
• The work of “doing” PHSR is not for experts alone, but an opportunity to implement participatory processes
• This requires PH to shift traditional monitoring and surveillance and put a strong KM strategy at the core … to drive action to improve health equity.
Proposed future research:
• Assessment of current PHSR processes being implemented by public health in Canada, with the objective of evaluating both the process and outcomes, including policy change
• Further development of standards for PHSR that effectively integrate health equity, surveillance, organizational and healthy public policy objectives
How to use the Action Framework:
• Get a copy of your current population health status report and meet with your colleagues … to explore your understanding of health equity/inequity and discuss the extent to which these concepts are part of each step in the PHSR process.
• Invite someone from the team that developed the report to talk to your colleagues … about how and where the principles of the knowledge mobilization core (application of an equity lens, communicate, collaborate) were undertaken in the PHSR process.
• Convene a cross-disciplinary and inter-sectoral group to discuss opportunities … to better integrate equity into the PHSR process and implement a knowledge mobilization strategy from the beginning of the process.
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A question to start our discussion: What is an easy next step that will strengthen an equity lens in your population health status reporting process? What is your role in this?
Health Equity Clicks: Organizations
Visit www.healthequityclicks.ca for a growing list of organizations taking action on the social determinants of health
Workshops & events
Visit our website to find out about the next knowledge exchange opportunity! http://nccdh.ca/connect/workshops-events/
Resource Library Your one-stop-shop for public health resources on the social determinants of health & health equity! http://nccdh.ca/resources/library/
Health Equity Clicks: Community
Share what works to advance health equity - join in online conversations, networking events, and more! www.nccdh.ca/community
• ‘Send’ questions to All (not privately to ‘Host’)
Q&A
Participant Side Panel in WebEx Your Comments/Questions
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Your Feedback is Important
Please take a few minutes to share your thoughts on today’s webinar. Your comments and suggestions help to improve the resources we offer and plan future webinars. The short survey is available at: https://nccmt.co1.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_1RYo72kiMPgpAxf
Poll Question #6 What are your next steps? I plan to …
A. Access the Action Framework. B. Read the NCCMT summary of the Action
Framework. C. Consider using Action Framework. D. Tell a colleague about the Action
Framework.
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Funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada | Affiliated with McMaster University The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the Public Health Agency of Canada.
For more information about the National Collaborating Centre for Methods and Tools: NCCMT website www.nccmt.ca Contact: [email protected]